NYT: “How ‘Doxxing’ Became a Mainstream Tool in the Culture Wars”

The JYT has a piece today on doxxing (“How ‘Doxxing’ Became a Mainstream Tool in the Culture Wars”). It begins:

SAN FRANCISCO — Riding a motorized pony and strumming a cigar box ukulele, Dana Cory led a singalong to the tune of “If you’re happy and you know it clap your hands.”

“You’re a Nazi and you’re fired, it’s your fault,” she sang. “You were spotted in a mob, now you lost your freaking job. You’re a Nazi and you’re fired, it’s your fault.”

“All together now!” Ms. Cory, 48, shouted to a cheering crowd in San Francisco’s Castro neighborhood on Saturday. They were protesting a rally planned by far-right organizers about a mile away.

“Dox a Nazi all day, every day,” she said.

Yes, it’s not only morally upstanding to dox a “neo-Nazi” (i.e., any white person questioning liberal premises on race or immigration), but it’s fun too!

The piece contains a tiny shred of concern that doxxing may backfire on the Left:

But Tony McAleer, a former white supremacist leader who now runs Life After Hate, a rehabilitation program for neo-Nazis, called doxxing a “ passive aggressive violence.” He said publicizing the names and workplaces of neo-Nazis may offer some level of solace to people outraged by them, but it makes his job more difficult.

“For us, it slows things down. We try to integrate people back to humanity,” Mr. McAleer said. “If isolation and shame is the driver for people joining these types of groups, doxxing certainly isn’t the answer.”

In short, once someone is labeled a Nazi on the internet, that person stays a Nazi on the internet.

But that ain’t gonna stop the SJWs:

“It’s important to dox Nazis,” said Andrea Grimes, 33, of Alameda, Calif. She held a sign that read: “White people pick one: Be the problem. Be the solution.” She said she had “outed” white supremacists to their parents, which she said often worked well to stop bad behavior online.

Ms. Cory, the ukulele player moving by electric pony, said that she had posted that morning a picture of a man she thought was a white-pride agitator. He was at a local train station wearing camouflage and smoking a cigarette near a car with Oregon license plates.

“They’re here, ” she said. Then she started the next song: “Tiki Torch Nazis,” set to “Beauty School Dropout” from the musical “Grease.”

Instead of the protracted, time-consuming process of doxxing these neo-Nazis, can’t we just kill them outright?

I mean, if you could go back in time, wouldn’t you kill the baby Hitler?

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Dems & Single-Payer

Whichever Democrat runs for POTUS in 2020 is going to make single-payer their central platform issue. Kamala Harris is the latest.

Dems are going all-in with the single payer option. And for many voters, particularly low-information voters, the idea of ‘free’, portable healthcare, and the anxieties and uncertainties it will put an end to, will be psychologically attractive.

The issue of such a system’s cost, not to mention their own corresponding tax increases, will not be much of a factor. As the opposing side rolls out the huge numbers, and the graphs and analyses, the voters’ eyes will glaze over.

It would be foolish for conservatives to think single-payer won’t be attractive to many Middle Americans.

Such is where we are.

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The Alt-Right & “Alt-Christianity”

In Time, Brian McClaren pens a Dreher-like warning (“The ‘Alt-Right’ Has Created Alt-Christianity”):

In a December 2016 conversation, journalist Graeme Wood, a former high school classmate of [Richard] Spencer’s, was surprised when Spencer started talking to him about religion, not defending Christianity but “he longed for something as robust and binding as Christianity had once been in the West, before churches surrendered their power to folk-singing liberals and televangelists.”

Piccolini, Evans and Spencer himself are telling us something we need to understand: White nationalism isn’t simply an extremist political ideology. It is an alt-religious movement that provides its adherents with its own twisted version of what all religions supply to adherents: identity, a personal sense of who I am; community, a social sense of where I belong; and purpose, a spiritual sense of why my life matters. If faith communities don’t provide these healthy, life-giving human needs, then death-dealing alt-religions will fill the gap.

So as traditional Christian institutions shrink, stagnate and struggle, Spencer and his white-supremacist allies, feeling supported by Donald Trump, are creating a violent alt-Christianity, as their counterparts in the Middle East have created an alt-Islam. They are supplying their followers with alt-liturgies, alt-mysticism, and alt-magic and are willing to smash, burn, destroy and kill for it, as they idolize their vision of “America” as a white “ethno-state,” an absolutized, divinized race and nation.

In Charlottesville, I saw Nazi flags on American soil and alt religious fervor in the faces of American Nazis and white nationalists. The message I will bring to faith leaders around our nation is both urgent and clear: Aristotle was right. Nature indeed abhors a vacuum. If we don’t provide emerging generations with genuine identity, community and purpose through robust and vibrant spiritual communities, somebody else will do so. If good religion slumbers and stagnates, bad religion is the alternative.

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A New Wagner Opera

There’s something in the air.

From FNC:

A Republican state senator from Pennsylvania refused to apologize for calling billionaire Democratic megadonor George Soros “a Hungarian Jew” with “a hatred for America” following the accusations of anti-Semitism.

Sen. Scott Wagner, who’s seeking next year’s Republican nomination for governor, spoke with The York Daily Record on Monday and suggested people are overreacting over his comments.

Now, if only more GOP figures had such gumption.

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The Rise of the Valkyries

Harper’s has a huge piece titled “The Rise of the Valkyries” written by Seyward Darby. It’s a liberal perspective on the women of the Alt Right, with a focus on Lana Lokteff.

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The Cucks Are Left Holding the Bag

After Nancy Pelosi’s surprising condemnation of Antifa violence, Colin Liddell asks:

After Charlottesville both of the main parties stepped forward to endorse antifa. Now the Dems have stepped back. Where does that leave the GOP?

Crickets.

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Liam Gallagher as Darth Vader

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The Princeton Statement

Princeton University has posted “Some Thoughts and Advice for Our Students and All Students” signed by 15 members of prominent Ivy League faculty.

We are scholars and teachers at Princeton, Harvard, and Yale who have some thoughts to share and advice to offer students who are headed off to colleges around the country. Our advice can be distilled to three words:

Think for yourself.

Now, that might sound easy. But you will find—as you may have discovered already in high school—that thinking for yourself can be a challenge. It always demands self-discipline and these days can require courage.

In today’s climate, it’s all-too-easy to allow your views and outlook to be shaped by dominant opinion on your campus or in the broader academic culture. The danger any student—or faculty member—faces today is falling into the vice of conformism, yielding to groupthink.

At many colleges and universities what John Stuart Mill called “the tyranny of public opinion” does more than merely discourage students from dissenting from prevailing views on moral, political, and other types of questions. It leads them to suppose that dominant views are so obviously correct that only a bigot or a crank could question them.

Since no one wants to be, or be thought of as, a bigot or a crank, the easy, lazy way to proceed is simply by falling into line with campus orthodoxies.

Don’t do that. Think for yourself.

It’s pissing in the wind, boys.

It’s way too late for this. You let the genie out of the bottle (with the Frankfurt School, deconstructionism, neo-Marxism, and other variations of postmodernism) and now you can’t get it back in.

I do hope SJWs and Antifa types force each and every one of these 15 faculty out of their jobs, so as to more quickly get us to the point where all this is heading.

And it’s gonna happen, because for every 15 of these faculty, there are hundreds more like this:

More than 100 Dartmouth College faculty members rushed to support a controversial fellow professor who repeatedly justified Antifa’s violent tactics — despite the Dartmouth president’s condemnation of the professor’s support for the so-called anti-fascist group.

Mark Bray, the author of “Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook” and visiting professor at the Gender Research Institute at Dartmouth, appeared in dozens of television interviews after the Antifa movement gained national traction following deadly clashes in Charlottesville, Va. earlier in August. Bray supported Antifa’s violence, dubbing it “self-defense” and a “legitimate response” to what he termed white supremacist and neo-Nazi violence.

As long as conservatives and race realists are categorized as ‘white supremacists’ or ‘neo-Nazis’, then, per their timeworm ‘the ends justifies the means’ logic, it’s anything goes for the Left.

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Pew: Religious Affiliation & Household Income

This chart from a 2016 Pew study on religious affiliation and household income is quite interesting (hat tip: Z Man.)

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The Same Tired Old Song

Peter Beinart is a well known, liberal Jewish writer who sees neo-Nazis behind every tree. (For instance, he characterized Trump’s Warsaw speech as deploying the term ‘West’ as a dog whistle for ‘white Christianity’, which, you see, is identical to neo-Nazism.)

Beinart has an article in the Jewish Daily Forward titled “The One Thing Jews Should Be Doing To Combat White Supremacy”, in which he admonishes his fellow Jews to be proactive in dissuading gentiles from ‘white supremacism’ (a term liberals use for white identitarianism):

For synagogues, countering the conditions that produce neo-Nazism might involve assisting a church in a troubled area…

To some Jews, these proposals might sound bizarre, even offensive. We’re supposed to help people who want us dead? What about all those non-Nazis who face economic and cultural problems? Don’t they have a better claim on our concern?

Sure, but it’s not zero sum. Combatting the hopelessness and misery that afflict many rural and de-industrialized American communities wouldn’t only benefit young white men at risk of turning to organized racism;it would also benefit their neighbors, some of whom are Latino and black.

The point is that because Jews occupy a different place in contemporary American society than did Jews in other societies facing rising anti-Semitism, we can respond in different ways. Of course, as Jews have for centuries, we must band together for self-protection. But as a successful, well-established, political influential community, we can also confront the dysfunction and despair that leads some of our fellow Americans to scapegoat us.

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